Stellar flare-driven evolution of primordial early exo-Earth atmospheres: Insights from a Young M Dwarf Flare model
E. Mamonova, K. Herbst, V. Kofman, O. Ozgurel, A. F. Kowalski + 2 more
TLDR
This study models the impact of young M dwarf flares on primordial exo-Earth atmospheres, showing significant stress and potential for permanent chemical changes.
Key contributions
- Investigated one year of chemical evolution for an exo-Earth orbiting an active M dwarf using YMDF and VULCAN.
- Modeled time-resolved spectral energy distributions from flares as radiative inputs for atmospheric photochemistry.
- Explored flare impact on primordial atmospheres with varying water vapor content, from solar to extreme steam.
- Found YMDF flares exert significantly greater stress on atmospheres than previous models, causing permanent changes.
Why it matters
Understanding M dwarf flare impact is crucial for assessing exoplanet habitability and interpreting future atmospheric spectroscopy. This model provides critical insights into how stellar activity can permanently alter primordial atmospheres, guiding future exoplanet research.
Original Abstract
Context. M dwarfs are key targets for terrestrial exoplanet studies, with prospects for atmospheric spectroscopy. However, strong stellar magnetic activity and frequent flaring require modelling efforts to assess their impact on planetary atmospheres. Aims. We aim to investigate one year of atmospheric chemical evolution of a young exo Earth orbiting an active M dwarf by coupling our Young M Dwarfs Flare (YMDF) model of stellar activity with the VULCAN chemistry kinetic code. Methods. The YMDF model provides time-resolved spectral energy distributions for high- and low-energy electron beam-driven flares, which are used as external radiative inputs to VULCAN to compute the time-dependent photochemistry and kinetics for different primordial atmospheric scenarios. Results. We present the impact of stellar flares on atmospheres with varying water vapour content, ranging from a plausible primordial atmosphere with solar abundances, representative of a planet-forming region in a dissipating protoplanetary disk, to an extreme water-steam atmosphere with minimal other species. This was explored across several configurations: variable flux in the YMDF model, the previous model representing an active but older M dwarf with added 10K or 400K bottom boundary heat flux, and a constant stellar flux model. Conclusions. Our study suggests that, compared to the previous model, the YMDF model produces synthetic flares that exert significantly greater stress on primordial atmospheres, regardless of the water-vapour content. Increased activity and prevalence of mid-size flares have the potential to induce permanent changes in atmospheric mixing ratios, especially in species with low abundances.
📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest
Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.